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Portraits

24 images Created 23 Jul 2014

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  • Marijke Unger with her dogs, car, airplane and motorcycle at Antique Field in Longmont, Colo.
    Marijke_Panorama_3.jpg
  • Former Georgetown, Colo., Mayor, model and topless dancer Koleen Brooks at her Dare 2 Be Different hair and tanning salon. She was ousted from her position as mayor due to "unbecoming" conduct after she allegedly bared her breasts in a bar and ordered a hit on a policeman who didn't support her. She subsequently posed for Playboy, cashing in on her notoriety. (Kevin Moloney for the New York Times Magazine)
    Koleen_Brooks_Georgetown_01.jpg
  • Layed-off welder Chuck Salak  with sons Cody, 10, Riley, 4, and Lacey, 4, and wife Lisa in Columbus, Nebr. The agricultural and manufacturing town has suffered in the weak economy, resulting in many local layoffs.  (Kevin Moloney for the New York Times)
    Hire_Columbus_Nebraska_19.jpg
  • Annette Moloney
    Annette_Moloney_71_01.jpg
  • Photojournalist and teacher Paul F. Moloney
    Paul_Moloney_75_03.jpg
  • Cheyenne Stone, owner of the Blue Room salon in Jackson, Wyo., poses in her waiting area.
    Cheyenne.jpg
  • Delores County deputy sheriff Tom Halper patrols a peaceful stretch of U.S. highway 666 in southwestern Colorado. According to Halper, there has been only one fatality on his stretch of the road in 9 years. (Kevin Moloney for the New York Times)
    666_Halper_01.jpg
  • Thomas Moore, CEO of Denver startup WildBlue Communications, hopes his planned spring satellite launch will bring inexpensive broadband internet to millions of rural Americans.
    WildBlue_036.jpg
  • Bill Mutagh, a space weather forecaster at the Space Environment Center of the National Oceanic & Atmospheric Administration, or NOAA, examines a 6-foot  spherical projection screen displaying an image of the surface of the sun at NOAA in Boulder, Colo. The center predicts sun spot activity and solar storms. (Kevin Moloney for the New York Times)
    Murtagh_01.jpg
  • Rene Cadima, 85, the only survivor among three local photographers who made pictures of the body of Ernesto "Che" Guevara in Vallegrande, Bolivia, holds a copy of one of his images Sunday, Nov. 14, 2004, Ernesto "Che" Guevara. Guevara was captured by the Bolivian army in 1967 in a nearby valley and executed in La Higuera days later. The army then flew Guevara's body, lashed to the skid of a helicopter, to Vallegrande where it was displayed in a hospital laundry for tow days. Guevara and fellow communist guerillas were attempting to launch a continent-wide revolution modeled on Guevara's success in Cuba in the late 1950s. The Bolivian government recently began promoting the area where he fought, was captured, killed and burried for 30 years as the "Ruta del Che," or Che's Route. (Kevin Moloney for the New York Times)
    RutaDelChe_08.tif
  • Singer songwriter Asyln before a performance in Beaver Creek, Colo. Asyln's new single, "Be That Girl," got air play on the Mall Radio Network in advance of the release of her album.
    Asyln_05.jpg
  • Pastor Ted Haggard, of the New Life church in Colorado Springs, Colo., observes set construction for a theatrical presentation of the passion to be staged at the mammoth church at Easter. Haggard later stepped down as pastor of one of the country's most influential evangelical megachurches on the heels of accusations he had smoked crack cocaine and had sex with a male prostitute in Denver.
    Evangelical_02.jpg
  • Dr. William Gray, a professor emeritus of Colorado State University, poses in snow atop Cameron Pass in the Rockies of northern Colorado. Gray argues that currently rising global temperatures are part of a repeating pattern, and that temperatures will drop again over the coming 20 years.
    Gray_01.jpg
  • Major Gen. Mark Graham, commander of Ft. Carson in Colorado Springs, Colo., poses with soldiers at the base. His youngest son, Kevin, 21, a top ROTC cadet, hung himself in 2003 after years of battling depression. Kevin Graham had stopped taking his medication to conceal his illness, fearing that disclosure would harm his potential Army career. Then, a year later, the general's oldest son, Second Lt. Jeff Graham, 23, died in Iraq, the victim of a roadside bomb. As a parent, General Graham said he has not forgiven himself for Kevin's suicide. The first step he took after arriving at Fort Carson was to speak openly and repeatedly about mental health, especially post-traumatic stress disorder, calling it an act of courage, not frailty, to ask for help. (Kevin Moloney for the New York Times)
    Graham_Carson_PTSD_01.jpg
  • Jeanette Vizguerra with daughter Luna, 10, son Roberto, 8, and daughter Suri, 3, Thursday, February 5, 2015. Colorado state legislators recently cut access to driver's licenses for undocumented immigrants to only one location in the stae offering 31 appointments per day for some 150,000 people seeking legal driving rights. (Kevin Moloney for the New York Times)
    Immigrant_Licenses_Colorado_09.jpg
  • Muhammad Norzai, a former president of the Colorado Muslim Society in Denver.  Earlier in the week the Federal Bureau of Investigation searched the home of Najibullah Zazi, a suburban Denver man suspected in a terrorist plot.(Kevin Moloney for the New York Times)
    Denver_Muslim_Terror_01.jpg
  • Allison Mitchell, 15, rides with her father Mark near their home at the foot of Pike's Peak in Woodland Park, Colo. Allison became closer with her father Mark after she realized how important her dad was to members of his Alcoholics Anonymous group. Mark Mitchell became sober one year before Allison was born, and the two share the joke that he is only one year older than she is.
    Aliison_Mark_Mitchell_19.jpg
  • Lewis Sharp, the Director of the Denver Art Museum, poses behind a neon piece by Dan Flavin within the controversial titanium-clad Hamilton building addition. Despite some setbacks with building construction and completion, the iconic structure attracts patron interest. (Kevin Moloney for the New York Times)
    DAM_Lewis_Sharp_07.jpg
  • Aron Ralston, the Colorado alpinist who achieved notiriety when he amputated his own arm to free himself from being trapped under a boulder after a fall in Utah. Ralston ascended Mt. Everest in 2010, five years after losing his arm. (Photo/Kevin Moloney)
    Aron_Ralston_12.jpg
  • Beorn Courtney, a water issues worker, poses on the South Platte River near Brighton, Colo. Courtney was part of a water leadership course.
    Water_Leaders_Courtney_04.jpg
  • Tom Iseman, of the Nature Conservancy, poses on the urban fringe of Boulder. Iseman was part of a water leadership course.
    Water_Leaders_Iseman_03.jpg
  • A 14-year-old saddle bronc rider named Tony pauses for a prayer at the start of the Earl Anderson Memorial Rodeo in Grover, Colo. Tony carries the scars of a committed rider.
    GroverTony.jpg
  • Bareback rider Darrell Smith, of Fruita, Colo, at the Earl Anderson Memorial Rodeo in Grover, Colo.
    Darrell_Smith_Grover_01.jpg
  • Brush, Colo.
    Brush_04_09.jpg